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If you are a homeowner, farmer, or contractor in the United States, a steel building is not a small purchase. You expect it to protect your vehicles, equipment, animals, or inventory for decades. The warranty is the written promise that backs that expectation.
In this guide, we will walk through what steel building warranties usually cover, what they do not, how long metal buildings actually last, and how warranties work specifically with a dealer like Get Carports. Everything is written in plain language so newer buyers and seasoned pros can both follow along.
A good steel building feels permanent. You pour the slab, set the structure, and plan to use it for decades. Warranties matter because they shift part of the risk away from you if something is wrong with the building itself.
If you put up a two-car garage or RV cover, you expect:
If a roof panel rusts through after a few years due to a coating defect, that should not be your repair bill. A clear warranty is one way to make sure it is handled by the supplier rather than your savings.
Barns, equipment sheds, and livestock shelters are business tools as much as buildings. A premature structural issue can:
When you are depending on that building every day, long term rust through coverage on the frame and properly engineered wind and snow designs are not “nice to have”. They are part of risk management.
If you are a contractor or business owner, warranty terms affect:
Being able to tell a customer that the frame and roof on a certified steel building are warranted for many years, and that install workmanship is backed for a defined period, is a real sales advantage.
When buyers ask “How long will this metal building last?” they are really asking two things:
On the material side, properly manufactured and installed steel buildings have impressive life spans:
The warranty does not cover the full life span of the materials, but it does cover the “reasonable service life” for defects. For example, Get Carports offers:
In other words, if the building is designed right, installed correctly, and maintained, you can expect it to outlast the warranty by a wide margin. The warranty simply covers you if something was wrong in the way it was built or coated.
Every manufacturer or dealer writes their warranty differently, but most steel building warranties fall into a familiar set of categories.
Here is a simple way to think about the main warranty types you will see:
*Ranges shown here reflect common industry practice. Always read the written warranty for the exact terms for your building.
Now let us break each of these down.
A rust through warranty is about serious corrosion, not just cosmetic orange spots.
With Get Carports:
Common things that can void rust through coverage Most providers, including Get Carports, exclude damage or premature rust caused by:
If your building will sit near corrosive materials, talk to the dealer in advance about the right foundation and clearance.
Workmanship warranties focus on how the building was installed, not the materials themselves.
They usually cover items like:
With Get Carports, installations are covered by a workmanship warranty that requires you to report defects within a set time after installation. The formal warranty page explains that workmanship issues must be reported within 365 days and describes what counts as a workmanship defect.
Many product pages also highlight a short, clearly defined workmanship period so buyers know to inspect their building soon after it goes up.
The practical lesson for you:
Panels are your building’s skin. Roof and wall sheets usually have two kinds of coverage:
Typical panel warranties:
What panel warranties usually exclude:
Even the best panel warranty still assumes you will rinse the building occasionally and keep gutters and valleys clean.
Doors, windows, openers, vents, cupolas, and insulation are often covered by separate warranties from their own manufacturers.
Common patterns:
Your dealer may help you submit a claim for these parts, but their main building warranty may not control these components. Always keep the paperwork that comes with accessory items.
There is a lot of confusion around what building warranties really do. Let us clear up some of the biggest myths.
Reality:
Years on paper do not tell the whole story. A 40 year paint warranty that is heavily prorated may offer less real value than a shorter non prorated term. What matters is what the warranty promises to do in specific situations and how easy the company is to work with.
Focus on:
Whether rust through coverage is full replacement or prorated Whether structural loads are clearly stated and backed by engineer drawings How claims are actually handled in practice
To stay covered:
You still need:
With Get Carports, using the professional install service also means your building falls under their workmanship terms instead of leaving you on your own if something is off.
Steel is low maintenance, but not maintenance free. Your warranty assumes you will:
Simple seasonal checks go a long way toward keeping your building and its warranty in good shape.
Cutting new openings, welding extra steel in place, attaching other structures, or significantly loading the frame in ways that were never engineered can all affect your warranty.
Most written warranties clearly say that:
If you plan to modify a building, call your dealer first and ask how to do it without harming the warranty.
Steel building warranties are not just fine print. They are a real part of the value you get when you invest in a garage, barn, or commercial building.
If you remember nothing else, keep these points in mind:
When you work with Get Carports, you get a metal building backed by clear rust through and workmanship warranties, certified load options, and written exclusions and limits that you can review before you sign.
Ready to take the next step?
The right building plus the right warranty means you can put it up, use it every day, and sleep well knowing it is backed on paper as well as in steel.
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